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Grip strength values and cut-off points based on over 200,000 adults of the German National Cohort - a comparison to the EWGSOP2 cut-off points

Authors :
Marie-Theres Huemer
Alexander Kluttig
Beate Fischer
Wolfgang Ahrens
Stefanie Castell
Nina Ebert
Sylvia Gastell
Karl-Heinz Jöckel
Rudolf Kaaks
André Karch
Thomas Keil
Yvonne Kemmling
Lilian Krist
Michael Leitzmann
Wolfgang Lieb
Claudia Meinke-Franze
Karin B Michels
Rafael Mikolajczyk
Ilais Moreno Velásquez
Tobias Pischon
Sabine Schipf
Börge Schmidt
Ben Schöttker
Matthias B Schulze
Hannah Stocker
Henning Teismann
Kerstin Wirkner
Michael Drey
Annette Peters
Barbara Thorand
Source :
Age and Ageing. 52
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2023.

Abstract

Background The European Working Group on Sarcopenia in Older People (EWGSOP) updated in 2018 the cut-off points for low grip strength to assess sarcopenia based on pooled data from 12 British studies. Objective Comparison of the EWGSOP2 cut-off points for low grip strength to those derived from a large German sample. Methods We assessed the grip strength distribution across age and derived low grip strength cut-off points for men and women (peak mean -2.5 × SD) based on 200,389 German National Cohort (NAKO) participants aged 19–75 years. In 1,012 Cooperative Health Research in the Region of Augsburg (KORA)-Age participants aged 65–93 years, we calculated the age-standardised prevalence of low grip strength and time-dependent sensitivity and specificity for all-cause mortality. Results Grip strength increased in the third and fourth decade of life and declined afterwards. Calculated cut-off points for low grip strength were 29 kg for men and 18 kg for women. In KORA-Age, the age-standardised prevalence of low grip strength was 1.5× higher for NAKO-derived (17.7%) compared to EWGSOP2 (11.7%) cut-off points. NAKO-derived cut-off points yielded a higher sensitivity and lower specificity for all-cause mortality. Conclusions Cut-off points for low grip strength from German population-based data were 2 kg higher than the EWGSOP2 cut-off points. Higher cut-off points increase the sensitivity, thereby suggesting an intervention for more patients at risk, while other individuals might receive additional diagnostics/treatment without the urgent need. Research on the effectiveness of intervention in patients with low grip strength defined by different cut-off points is needed.

Details

ISSN :
14682834 and 00020729
Volume :
52
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Age and Ageing
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....53bb80762748f9b715964f0a945b85ac